New Color Nokia 6610

InfoSync reports that the first item on the agenda at Nokia Connection 2002 was the unveiling of the new Nokia 6610, which looks like an alternative and toned down design of the previously announced Nokia 7210. The phone features MMS, tri-band (GSM/GPRS 900/1800/1900 MHz), J2ME support, an integrated FM radio, handsfree speaker, a 12-bit (4096 colors) display, polyphonic ringtones and a 4-way navipad, and is targeted more towards business professionals in terms of design (exchangable covers will be available though).

Share this:

Like this:

Related

Similar posts

Camera maker RED is building a phone ...
—
Camera maker RED is building a phone with a ‘holographic’ screenhttps://www.engadget.com/2017/07/06/red-hydrogen-one/The people behind the crazy-expensive RED cameras are making a crazy-expensive, holographic phone. The company just revealed its plans to release the Hydrogen One, a high-powered, unlocked Android smartphone with prices starting at an eye-watering $1,195. That gets you an aluminum phone with some crazy [...]

Art of the Title
—
About the site — Art of the Titlehttp://www.artofthetitle.com/about/Art of the Title is an online publication run by Managing Editor Lola Landekic and Senior Editor Will Perkins, both of whom are based in Toronto, Canada. Art of the Title is the definitive resource for title sequence design, spanning the film, television, conference, and videogame industries. Featuring [...]

Sonnet is a device that lets you comm...
—
Sonnet is a device that lets you communicate with your smartphone off-the-grid | 9to5Toyshttps://9to5toys.com/2017/06/29/sonnet-off-grid-messaging/The Toronto startup has built a smartphone add-on that lets anyone communicate without a cellular signal or wireless networks at all. Sonnet uses long-range radio frequency bandwidth to connect phones over a range of several miles. It essentially turns your phone into [...]

Caltech’s ‘lensless camer...
—
Caltech’s ‘lensless camera’ could make our phones truly flathttps://www.engadget.com/2017/06/22/caltech-lensless-heterodyne-camera/Cameras need lenses, so your thin phone has a bump, but one day an ultra-thin optical phased array chip could change that. It uses math and optical sensors to simulate the effect of a lens. According to Professor Ali Hajimiri, it “can switch from a fish-eye to a telephoto [...]

OnePlus 5 review: as fast and smooth ...
—
OnePlus 5 review: as fast and smooth as Google Pixel, without the price tag | Technology | The Guardianhttps://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/jun/20/oneplus-5-review-fast-smooth-google-pixel-price-smartphone?utm_source=esp&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=GU+Today+main+NEW+H+categories&utm_term=231601&subid=19723158&CMP=EMCNEWEML6619I2New smartphone continues phone’s USP of refined metal design and fluid user experience, but it’s not quite the bargain its predecessors were [...]

"Facebook’s algorithmic and human reviewers seem unable to accurately parse the context and intent of their usage. Whether intentional or not, these moderation fails constitute a form of censorship. And just like Facebook’s dangerous and discriminatory real names policy, these examples demonstrate how the company’s own practices often amplify harassment and cause real harm to marginalized groups like LGBTQ people, communities of color, and domestic violence survivors."

"Minority groups in tech are no strangers to being second-guessed, condescended to, overlooked, underpaid, and uncredited. But seeing Damore’s arguments made public—and, in some cases, seeing them elicit support—was a fresh smack in the face."

Update: A Facebook spokesperson apologized for the mistake and said, "We know how painful it is when someone feels unwelcome or attacked on our platform, and how much worse it must be when they are prevented from sharing that experience with others. We need to do better and are committed to improving our process on these important issues." The site is also working on ways to distinguish between hate speech and its condemnation.

“I felt more secure at my other job. You didn’t have people looking down at you,” Nicole said. Now she works at cafeterias with names like “Epic” and “Living the Dream”, and the distance between the two classes of Facebook worker can feel immense.